Immagine dell'autore.

David Malouf

Autore di Remembering Babylon

62+ opere 5,326 membri 149 recensioni 21 preferito

Sull'Autore

David Malouf was born in Brisbane, Australia on March 20, 1934. He received a B.A. with honours from the University of Queensland in 1954. He lived and worked in Europe from 1959 to 1968, then taught English at the University of Sydney until 1977. After 1977 he became a full-time poet and novelist. mostra altro His collections of poetry include Bicycle and Other Poems, Neighbours in a Thicket, Wild Lemons, First Things Last, Typewriter Music, and An Open Book. He received the Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry for Earth Hour. His novels include Johnno, Ransom, An Imaginary Life, Child's Play, Fly Away Peter, Harland's Half Acre, Dream Stuff, Every Move You Make, and The Conversations at Curlow Creek. He received the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and the Prix Femina Etranger for The Great World and the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award for Remembering Babylon. His collections of short stories include Antipodes, Untold Tales, Dream Stuff, and Every Move You Make. His Collected Stories won the 2008 Australia-Asia Literary Award. His essays collections include A First Place and The Writing Life. He also wrote the libretto for Richard Meale's opera Voss. He won the 2016 Australia Council Award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Conrad Del Villar

Serie

Opere di David Malouf

Remembering Babylon (1993) 1,130 copie
Ransom (2009) 735 copie
Una vita immaginaria (1978) 731 copie
The Great World (1990) 421 copie
Fly Away Peter (1982) 340 copie
Johnno (1976) 289 copie
Dream Stuff (2000) 190 copie
Harland's Half Acre (1984) 170 copie
The Complete Stories (2007) 147 copie
12 Edmondstone Street (1985) 121 copie
Every Move You Make (2007) 99 copie
Antipodes (1985) 81 copie
Child's Play (1999) 32 copie
The Writing Life (2014) 24 copie
A first place (2014) 23 copie
Earth Hour (2014) 22 copie
A Spirit Of Play (1998) 21 copie
An open book (2018) 16 copie
Typewriter Music (2007) 12 copie
Selected Poems, 1959-89 (1992) 11 copie
The one day (2015) 10 copie
Being there. Book 3 (2015) 10 copie
Jane Eyre - A Libretto (2000) 9 copie
Bicycle and other poems (1970) 5 copie
Waterfront 4 copie
Such is Life 2 copie
Four Poets 2 copie
Blood Relations (1989) 2 copie
Bill Henson Photographs (1988) 2 copie
Som eit barn : roman (1984) 1 copia
Gesture of a hand (1975) 1 copia
Verso mezzanotte (2008) 1 copia
The Valley of Lagoons (2006) 1 copia
Poems, 1975-76 (1976) 1 copia
Sky News 1 copia
REGATE 1 copia

Opere correlate

L'arte di amare (0001) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni1,648 copie
Riders in the Chariot (1961) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni681 copie
The Middle Parts of Fortune (1929) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni393 copie
The Faber Book of Gay Short Fiction (1992) — Collaboratore — 320 copie
Granta 77: What We Think of America (2002) — Collaboratore — 217 copie
Granta 70: Australia - The New New World (2000) — Collaboratore — 167 copie
Granta 68: Love Stories (1999) — Collaboratore — 149 copie
Granta 95: Loved Ones (2006) — Collaboratore — 119 copie
The Oxford Book of Travel Stories (1996) — Collaboratore — 74 copie
Australian Gay and Lesbian Writing: An Anthology (1993) — Collaboratore — 57 copie
The Young Desire It (1937) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni50 copie
Beach : Stories by the Sand and Sea (2000) — Collaboratore — 32 copie
The Best Australian Essays: A Ten-Year Collection (2011) — Collaboratore — 29 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2008 (2008) — Collaboratore — 28 copie
One World of Literature (1992) — Collaboratore — 24 copie
Coming of Age Around the World: A Multicultural Anthology (2007) — Collaboratore — 24 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2010 (2010) — Collaboratore — 23 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2006 (2006) — Collaboratore — 23 copie
The Best Australian Stories 2007 (2007) — Collaboratore — 22 copie
The Penguin Book of the Ocean (2010) — Collaboratore — 20 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2011 (2011) — Collaboratore — 16 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2003 (2003) — Collaboratore — 15 copie
TLS Short Stories (2003) — Collaboratore — 12 copie
The Best Australian Essays 2014 (2014) — Collaboratore — 9 copie

Etichette

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Utenti

Discussioni

Group Read, April 2018: Remembering Babylon in 1001 Books to read before you die (Aprile 2018)

Recensioni

The fictional story of Ovid after his banishment from Rome. Descriptive writing but wouldn't rush back.
 
Segnalato
SteveMcI | 17 altre recensioni | Dec 1, 2023 |
All the characters in this extraordinary book see themselves as "the outsider", but because of their shared colonial pioneering position, they make Gemmy the outsider.
I thoroughly enjoyed the way David Malouf introduces the bare bones of the story, and then gives us the back story on so many of the characters.
There is suspicion and distrust, compassion and understanding, despair and struggle.

My daughter had been assigned 'Remembering Babylon' as part of a literature course in her university studies, and had left it at my place when she'd finished. I am so grateful.… (altro)
 
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buttsy1 | 29 altre recensioni | Nov 23, 2023 |
Wonderful book especially the second time I read it. It is compassionate in tone, showing reverence for growing up in straitened circumstance and the mysteries surrounding that early experience of making sense of one's life. The reader is lead to sharing in sympathy with characters who are all flawed or damaged through accidents that struck them.
This is one of my favourite Australian novels. Malouf is full of love for characters, in the same way that Harland is driven by his love for his family, one broken by accident and bad luck.… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
ivanfranko | 3 altre recensioni | Nov 18, 2023 |
One of the most astonishing pieces of Australian writing I have ever read. It's no secret that Malouf is one of our national treasures, but Remembering Babylon is something else entirely. Written from a dozen or so perspectives, each absorbing in its accuracy, Malouf turns his eye in this short novel to the complexities of colonialism, specifically among white, rural Australians in the 1860s. Less than a century after the country was colonised, a small town (village?) of white people struggle with the introduction amongst them of a white man who has been living with Indigenous people for 16 years. Their concern about whether he has completely lost "it", their fear of the unknown - anything beyond view of their steeple - and that uncomfortable, uneasy relationship with their own colonialism, their sense of inferiority to the mother country, and the social and cultural clashes between neighbours that have made up every society since time immemorial... all captured in fewer than 200 pages.

Malouf smartly chooses not to write from the Indigenous perspective - he has rightly said that no white person in Australia can really do that - but gives us enough touches through Gemmy's point of view that we understand the true tragedy of colonialism, as symbolised through Janet's relationship with her bees. Being able to see them communicate but not quite understand how, and wondering if you knew it once, is a thought that has often haunted me, and remains haunting.

By 1860, my ancestors were well settled in Australia, their children becoming young adults and soon to have children of their own. My relationship with this land - as a white, rural-born, gay, intellectual, urbanite - is a complex one, and so is my relationship with the attempted genocide my ancestors perpetuated. Although the killing ended long ago, the cultural suppression continued well into the 1960s - the decade of my parents' birth - and we live with a lineage of divided privilege, culture, and sentiment. Compared to our neighbours "across the pond", New Zealand, who charted a very different 19th century, it is very telling.

To return to Malouf's work, his prose is tight, almost silhouetting the situations that occur, using the characters' summations of moments and often sidestepping detail, to leave us caught in the shadow between the people involved. It's a strange, sometimes surprisingly synopsis-like approach to writing, and yet it somehow produces a staggering effect. This is a quintessential Australian novel, one that examines our tortured history without unfairly chastising. The relationship between white and black is one key theme, but so is the relationship between home and away. Even now in 2018, the so-called "cultural cringe" remains strong in Australia. We have a fractious relationship with the UK, and within ourselves about the UK - the proximity to "the world", the lengthy history and culture, the feeling that we have been distanced from so much cultural understanding through the fault of our parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and so on. We often discuss this in the context of Australia's newer migrant families, but I can attest it remains strong in an eighth-generation Australian like myself. To peer into the minds of people who themselves remember the mother country, or - even worse - have heard it from everyone around them but are themselves inexperienced, is a gift in the hands of Malouf.

Perhaps this is a work about questions, not about answers. The answers are for us to find - if, indeed, we ever can.
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
therebelprince | 29 altre recensioni | Oct 24, 2023 |

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Statistiche

Opere
62
Opere correlate
29
Utenti
5,326
Popolarità
#4,672
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
149
ISBN
290
Lingue
12
Preferito da
21

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